单词 | modality |
释义 | modalityn. 1. a. Those aspects of a thing which relate to its mode, or manner or state of being, as distinct from its substance or identity; the non-essential aspect or attributes of a concept or entity. Also: a particular quality or attribute denoting the mode or manner of being of something. Cf. mode n. 6a. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > existence > extrinsicality or externality > [noun] > non-essentialness modality1545 adventitiousness1794 contingentialness1865 inessentiality1890 the world > existence and causation > existence > extrinsicality or externality > [noun] > non-essentialness > that which is non-essential or accident accidentala1398 adventionc1475 accident1491 circumstance1599 under-accident1632 contingential1647 modality1647 adventitial1652 extrinsical1652 adventition1661 ornamental1774 inessential1778 non-essential1806 1545 J. Bale Mysterye Inyquyte P. Pantolabus f. 34 Substancialite, deificalite,..modalite, supposytalite, ypostaticalite. a1617 P. Baynes Comm. Epist. First Chapter Paul to Ephesians (1618) xix. 367 Liberty in this sense,..contingency, necessity, these are modalities agreeing to effects, as effects are in order to their second causes. 1647 M. Hudson Divine Right Govt. ii. iii. 87 Even the temporal part of that promise..was performed exactly in the reality, though not in the Modality thereof. 1704 J. Norris Ess. Ideal World II. x. 401 We cannot conceive the modality of any substance as a Being distinct from that substance... We cannot conceive a circle as a being distinct from extension whose modality it is. 1825 New Monthly Mag. 14 474 The resemblance takes its colour from the modalities of thought and feeling of the artist by whom it is sketched. 1881 J. Todhunter Rienzi i. i. 6 The barber's mystery is, indeed, my quality or modality. I am barber per accidens; but my vera essentia is philosopher. 1922 J. Joyce Ulysses i. iii. [Proteus] 37 Stephen closed his eyes to hear his boots crush crackling wrack and shells... Five, six: the nacheinander. Exactly: and that is the ineluctable modality of the audible. 1976 Times Lit. Suppl. 23 Jan. 88/4 Defoe..shares with Joyce an almost total responsiveness to the ineluctable modality of things. 2000 S. Benso Face of Things vii. 84 The modality of the present-at-hand is thus the modality of things which are worldless. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > existence > extrinsicality or externality > [noun] > mode or form of existence > question relating to mode (not substance) modality1656 1656 T. Burton Diary (1828) I. 44 Shall punctilios and modalities and forms, bind and tie up a Parliament? 1715 R. South 12 Serm. IV. 318 These Men..have by their Modalities, Suppositalities, Circumincessions, and twenty such other Chimeras, so misrepresented this..Article of the Trinity to Mens Reason. 2. Logic. a. The fact or quality of being modal (see modal adj.1 1); esp. the property by which a proposition is qualified as possible, impossible, necessary, or contingent. Also: a particular modal qualification attaching to a proposition. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > logic > logical proposition > [noun] > modal logic or proposition modal1599 modality1628 modus1629 mode1852 modal logic1932 1628 T. Spencer Art of Logick To Rdr. The modalitie of propositions doth explicate the subject or predicate of the proposition wherein it is. 1725 I. Watts Logick ii. ii. §4 But whether the modality be natural, moral, &c. yet in all these propositions it is the mode is the proper predicate. 1843 J. S. Mill Syst. Logic I. i. iv. §2 Those distinctions among propositions which are said to have reference to their modality. 1870 W. S. Jevons Elem. Lessons Logic vii. 70 All these assertions are made with a different degree of certainty or modality. 1927 Mind 36 7 Then we shall have the plain straightforward conjunctive fact P-and-Q, which does not involve Modality. 1949 E. H. Hutten & M. Reichenbach tr. H. Reichenbach Theory of Probability (ed. 2) x. §80. 404 Like probabilities, the modalities must be regarded as properties not of individual propositions but of propositional sequences. 1951 G. H. von Wright Ess. Modal Logic 3 Related to the problems of mixed modalities are the problems of super-imposed or higher order modalities. 1972 Philos. Rev. 81 90 There are sentences involving de re modality which have no de dicto equivalents. 1989 Brit. Jrnl. Philos. Sci. 40 561 He introduces the reader to de dicto and de re modalities, to quantified modal logic, and to Quine's objections to quantified modal logic which focus on essentialism and cross-world identity. 2017 T. Tulenheimo Objects & Modalities i. 17 Most philosophers and logicians discussing the conceptual problems of modalities have ignored the way in which Hintikka deals with modal individuals. b. In uses derived from Kantian transcendental logic: the feature of a judgement which determines its classification as problematic, assertoric, or apodictic.The precise relation of this sense to the older sense 2a is controversial. Kant claimed to derive his metaphysical categories from an analysis of the forms of judgement, accordingly adding to the modal concepts of possibility and impossibility, necessity and contingency, which corresponded to his ‘problematic’ and ‘apodictic’ judgements, those of existence and non-existence, corresponding to his ‘assertoric’ judgements. Kant's classification of judgements in logic was taken up by some subsequent logicians, but most recent logicians would not treat the propositions corresponding to his assertoric judgements as modally qualified at all. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > idealism > [noun] > Kantianism > elements of conception1701 schematism1794 categorical imperative1796 intuition1796 matter1796 receptivity1796 schema1796 dialectic1797 multifarious1798 reciprocity1799 form1803 synthesis1817 Anschauung1820 manifold?1822 category1829 modality1836 multiplex1836 predicable1838 multiple1839 multiplicity1839 presentmenta1842 elanguescence1855 the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > logic > logical classification > [noun] > apprehending a relation between two concepts > Kantian modality modality1836 1836 Penny Cycl. VI. 368/1 These Categories consist of four primordial classes: 1. quantity, 2. quality, 3. relation, 4. modality; each class containing three Categories. 1884 tr. H. Lotze Logic 53 What modality have such sentences as these, ‘S will be P’, ‘S ought to be P’, ‘S may be P’, ‘S has been P’? No one of them affirms reality, but the unreal which is past in the last is something quite different from that which is permitted, enjoined, or future in the others... If all these shades of meaning had been taken into account, the forms of modality might have been correspondingly increased in number. 1907 Philos. Rev. 16 590 Analogous innovations of Kant's own are shown in his divisions with respect to quality, relation, and modality. 1966 P. F. Strawson Bounds of Sense ii. ii. 78 Under the head of modality a distinction is drawn between judgements to the effect that something is possibly, actually, or necessarily the case. 1999 S. Gardner Kant & ‘Critique of Pure Reason’ vi. 132 The forms of judgement are set out in the Table of Judgements.., where they are divided into four groups (quantity, quality, relation, modality). 3. Law. The fact or quality of being modal (see modal adj.1 2). Now historical. ΚΠ 1890 Cent. Dict. Modality, in civil law, the quality of being limited as to time or place of performance, or, more loosely, of being suspended by a condition: said of a promise. 1988 D. Johnston Roman Law Trusts 239 Modus was a modality on a bequest which differed from a condition. 4. Psychology. a. A faculty or sense, such as sight, hearing, etc.; a category of sensory perception; †a qualitative aspect of such a category (obsolete). ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > psychology > experimental psychology > stimulus-response > stimulus > sensory nature of stimulus > [noun] modality1895 the mind > mental capacity > psychology > experimental psychology > stimulus-response > stimulus > sensory nature of stimulus > [noun] > affected area modality1895 1895 Amer. Jrnl. Psychol. 7 84 Sinn, sense, sensibility, modality. 1909 Cent. Dict. Suppl. Modality, in Psychol.: (a) the nature or character of sensation or stimulus as determined by the sense-department to which it belongs or appeals: a term proposed by Helmholtz, to avoid a confusing use of quality... Hence (b) the sense-department itself: as, the sensations of different modalities. 1925 G. B. Phelan (title) Feeling experience and its modalities. 1951 G. Humphrey Thinking ii. 57 Sensory presentations of various modalities—auditory, kinaesthetic, and so on. 1969 R. D. Laing Self & Others (ed. 2) ii. 18 We also categorize the type of experience by modality: namely, memory, imagination, dreaming, waking perception, and so on. 1972 D. R. Kenshalo in J. W. Kling & L. A. Riggs Woodworth & Schlosberg's Exper. Psychol. (ed. 3) v. 119/1 If we insist that each primary sensory modality has its own nerve pathway, the tactile, pain, and temperature senses fail to qualify as different modalities because their nerves are intermingled. 1987 S. M. Stahl et al. Cognitive Neurochem. vii. 94 There is at least a rough organization of different sensory modalities and submodalities in the inferior parietal lobule. 2004 W. D. Willis & R. E. Coggeshall Sensory Mechanisms Spinal Cord I. i. 1 A sensory modality is a class of sensations. That is, sensations of two different modalities are qualitatively different (e.g., hearing versus vision), whereas sensations within a single modality are only quantitatively different (e.g., different frequencies of two sounds). b. An attribute or trait of personality; a way of behaving. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > psychology > psychology of personality > [noun] > feature of personality > qualitatively different modality1946 1946 R. B. Cattell in Brit. Jrnl. Psychol. 36 159 Three classes or ‘modalities’ of traits: (1) Dynamic traits, e.g. dispositions, sentiments, neurotic symptoms, ergs; (2) Temperament traits, e.g. general emotionality, surgency, preservation, hyperthyroidism, personal tempo; (3) Abilities or cognitive traits, e.g. native general intelligence, acquired perceptual and executive skills. 1950 E. H. Erikson Childhood & Society vii. 222 Anal-muscular maturation sets the stage for experimentation with two simultaneous sets of social modalities: holding on and letting go. 1962 E. R. Hilgard Introd. Psychol. (ed. 3) xvi. 452/2 Guilford..writes of seven ‘modalities of traits’, indicating that the kind of trait we see depends upon the direction from which we view personality. 1967 N. Podhoretz Making It i. ii. 30 He was..tolerant of any modality of Jewish existence so long as it remained identifiably and self-consciously Jewish. 1972 Jrnl. Social Psychol. 87 52 The conditioning events taking place during this phase leave an indelible imprint on the psychological modalities referred to as personality. 2009 B. Engler Personality Theories xvi. 445 Lazarus believes that the seven modalities—behavior, affect, sensation, imagery, cognition, interpersonal processes, and drugs/biology—may be said to make up human personality. 5. Music. The quality or fact of being modal (see modal adj.1 3). ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical sound > pitch > system of sounds or intervals > [noun] > medieval mode > modality modality1906 1906 Grove's Dict. Music (ed. 2) II. 230/1 The most vexed question presented by Ancient Greek Music is that of its tonality or modality. Modern music exhibits two modalities, that of our major and that of our minor mode. 1938 Scrutiny 7 173 The shape of his [sc. Roussel's] melodies..precisely determined their modality. 1955 New Oxf. Hist. Music (rev. ed.) II. iv. 110 Theorists and cantors..merely classified the melodies,..dividing the antiphons and a few other chants into groups according to their respective modality and the liturgical order of the texts. 1980 New Grove Dict. Music XII. 377/1 As an indigenous term in Western music theory the term [sc. mode] is applicable in three separate successive historical stages: to Gregorian chant, to Renaissance polyphony, and to tonal harmonic music of the 17th century to the 19th. These three stages of modality in European music were historically continuous. 1991 Music & Lett. 72 82 That some works can be convincingly analysed in modal terms is clear; that modality is comparable to tonality..is debatable. 2000 K. Potter Four Musical Minimalists ii. 114 The three pitches of the closing modules also suggest a Mixolydian modality on C. 6. Grammar. The quality or fact of being modal (see modal adj.1 5). ΚΠ 1907 N.E.D. at Modal a. Of a particle: denoting manner or modality. 1921 E. Sapir Lang. 87 The interrogative sentence possesses an entirely different ‘modality’ from the declarative one. 1964 M. A. K. Halliday et al. Ling. Sci. ii. 34 Each time we use a verbal group in spoken English we select for finiteness, modality, contrastiveness, polarity and voice. 1992 Lit. & Ling. Computing 7 31/2 The feature of modality, realized either by modal verbs, such as ‘can’ and ‘could’, or by verbs with modal meaning such as ‘have to’. 2017 D. Ayoun & C. Gilbert in M. Howard & P. Leclercq Tense-Aspect-Modality in 2nd Lang. vi. 184 Modality..embodies displacement, a crucial property of natural languages, that allows us to express a vast range of emotions, thoughts and dreams,instead of being limited to the here and now. 7. Medicine. a. A symptom, procedure, or other factor which aids diagnosis. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > symptom > [noun] entacha1375 symptom1398 accidenta1400 showerc1400 prognostic?a1425 grudgingc1440 prognosticationc1475 grudge1562 symptomates1583 grutchinga1637 annotation1644 pathognomic1683 pathognomonic1704 prognosis1706 modality1911 1911 Brit. Homoeopathic Jrnl. 1 103 On examining a series of particular organs we find that a symptom or modality runs so strongly through them all that it may be predicated of the patient himself. 1927 Brit. Homoeopathic Jrnl. 17 347 The conception modality does not appear to have been carefully distinguished, whether modality refers only to symptoms produced by the drugs or met with in patients or healthy persons before or after the drug had been administered. 1968 New Eng. Jrnl. Med. 18 Apr. 892/1 Lymphangiography, which today is perhaps the single most important diagnostic modality in the evaluation of the patient with Hodgkin's disease. 1995 N.Y. Law Jrnl. 14 Feb. s4/3 It is not an exaggeration to say that any attempt at diagnosis using clinical findings and any diagnostic modality other than excisional/open biopsy is simply guesswork. 2009 P. R. Gavin in P. R. Gavin & R. S. Bagley Pract. Small Animal MRI i. §i. 2 Computed tomography (CT) was first utilized in the mid-1970s in veterinary medicine... The modality was modified for the study of large animal species shortly thereafter. b. Any more or less distinct method or technique used in the treatment of a specific condition (e.g. chemotherapy and radiotherapy in the treatment of cancer). ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > medical treatment > [noun] > plan or method of treatment intentionc1400 method?a1425 scope1583 cure1842 pathy1842 modality1932 1932 W. A. N. Dorland & E. C. L. Miller Med. Dict. (ed. 16) 796/1 Modality,..a method of application of, or the employment of, any therapeutic agent; limited usually to physical agents. 1965 Jrnl. Amer. Podiatry Assoc. 55 700/1 Often the success or failure of any modality is in direct proportion to the operator's knowledge of the modality's potential, its limitations, and its intelligent application. 1976 National Observer (U.S.) 18 Dec. 16/4 These reports have misled many Americans to believe that therapeutic acupuncture is a well-tested, thoroughly proven therapeutic modality that is a panacea for any and all illnesses. 1992 ENT News May 14/1 The effect of combined modality treatment..on the survival of skin flaps raised in rats 6 to 8 weeks after completion of chemotherapy and radiotherapy. 2002 J. J. A. Joosten et al. in N. A. Habib Multi-Treatm. Modalities Liver Tumours xvii. 211 Already in the 19th century the application of extreme cold has been recognised as a possible treatment modality in cancer therapy. 8. Esp. in politics, diplomacy, etc.: an arrangement or condition; a procedure or method; a means for the attainment of a desired end. ΘΚΠ society > authority > rule or government > politics > [noun] > political actions or practice > a political procedure or method modality1912 co-decision1972 1912 S. Whitman in Fortn. Rev. Sept. 444 [Quoting Prince Reuss VII] Only with difficulty and under certain modalities would he be able to control the excited feeling of the French. 1918 tr. G. von Hertling in Manch. Guardian 26 Jan. 5/5 The conditions and modalities of the evacuation..must be agreed between Germany and France. 1921 tr. A. Briand in Times 2 May 8/2 An acceptance of the modalities of payment which are to be drawn up. 1957 G. F. Kennan in Listener 28 Nov. 868/1 The modalities of German unification must flow from the will of the German people, expressed in free elections. 1960 Guardian 23 Aug. 7/6 He did hear nine members of the Council praise his statesmanship and the procedures (‘modalities’ is the new and foolish word) he had adopted. 1970 New Yorker 17 Oct. 162/2 The new word that is constantly being heard here is ‘modalities’. Everyone involved in the peace talks agrees that the military modalities of a cease-fire are more easily negotiated than the political modalities. 1988 Daily News (Tanzania) 19 Dec. 4/7 We have the basis for success—political will and technical expertise to work out the modalities, a PTA expert said. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2002; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1545 |
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